Charles Foster is a New York Times bestselling author whose work has been longlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize, shortlisted for the Wainwright Prize for nature writing, and won the Ig Nobel Prize for Biology and the 30 Millions d'Amis Prize. He is a fellow of Exeter College, University of Oxford, and has particular passions for Greece, waves, the Upper Palaeolithic, mountains and swifts.
Highly imaginative... Evocative and beautifully written, it's a
deeply immersive read.
*Observer*
Charles Foster is the most original voice in nature writing today -
funny, urgent, poetic, philosophical and deeply moving. These
shape-shifting, illuminating stories send us into the souls of
other animals, bequeathing them personhood and giving us precious
enlightenment and, hopefully, the inspiration to take action.
*Patrick Barkham, author of Wild Green Wonders*
Utterly exhilarating. Cry of the Wild gives us the chance to
viscerally inhabit the lives of a cast of wild creatures as they
navigate the rigours of a changed world. By turns tragic and
joyful, every story yields fascinating insights into the way our
fellow earthlings make their way through life. Through their eyes,
we see ourselves, and the unholy ecological havoc we're wreaking.
With the power both to move and to shame us, this book demands that
we change our ways.
*Lee Schofield, author of Wild Fell*
Cry of the Wild is spectacular and unique. It is beautiful and
engrossing, full of erudition and heart. Foster's detailed
eloquence brings us within a chromosome's thickness of experiencing
first-hand our impacts on the lives of his eight wild protagonists
- so that reading this book feels like being made suddenly
omniscient. In other words, you really have to.
*Tom Moorhouse, author of Ghosts in the Hedgerow*
Charles Foster's new volume of animal stories may be challenging in
content and deadly serious in terms of its moral purpose, but his
prose is also astonishingly playful, humorous, immensely varied and
outrageously intelligent. For my money he is the most inventive
British writer presently at work on the theme of nature.
*Mark Cocker, author of Our Place*
There aren't many writers like Charles around... His ability to
step across emotional boundaries and enter the consciousness of the
wild makes for an exhilarating, immersive, yet at times disturbing
read. For me, the end result is a deeply thought-provoking book
that encourages the reader to explore for themselves exactly where
they stand on issues of humanity, conservation and moral
legacy.
*James Aldred, author of Goshawk Summer*
Fiercely polemical, forcing the reader to see the world in a new
light... Charles Foster is an original thinker with a strangely
compelling prose style... Cry of the Wild is thought-provoking,
profound, at times infused with a beautifully wistful lyricism and
often witty.
*Country Life*
Foster [brings] a sense of wonder: geese fly in from the north with
snow falling from their wings; imagined through the eyes of a young
rabbit, a white owl wafts through the still night air like
thistledown, a strangely beautiful occurrence that might at any
moment end the rabbit's life... He avoids the temptations of
anthropomorphism while reminding us that we who share these traits
are more vulnerably and elegantly animal than we pretend.
*Literary Review*
A lyrical work of creative nonfiction containing eight stories of
besieged animal lives. Emotional without being anthropomorphic, it
is a thought-provoking read.
*BBC Wildlife Magazine*
Ardent and arresting... one of the darkest, most haunting books
I've read in a long time... Yet the stories are also motivated by
such depth of attention and love that their very existence offers
some hope for a better future.
*New Statesman*
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